How ESPN became a political punching bag in the Trump era

By now you likely know the basic play-by-play of why ESPN is in the news this week: SportsCenter anchor Jemele Hill called President Donald Trump a “white supremacist” in a tweet on Monday; a reporter asked White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders about the tweet and Sanders called it a “fireable offense” on Wednesday; and inevitably, Trump sent out a tweet on Friday morning: “ESPN is paying a really big price for its politics (and bad programming). People are dumping it in RECORD numbers. Apologize for untruth!”

But the general public may be mostly unaware of the larger context here, a long-simmering narrative that has gained traction on social media for a year already: the idea that ESPN at some point became an overtly liberal network.

One high-ranking ESPN staffer calls it “an endless drumbeat.”

The narrative is mostly false. ESPN is a sports network; it does not have any overt, intentional political bias. And there are likely more conservatives at ESPN than liberals, especially among football analysts. (ESPN even commissioned a survey in May and found that only 18% of people surveyed saw a political bias, and 30% of those people saw ESPN as too conservative, not liberal.)

But now the noise is drowning out the truth. (And make no mistake, the noise is loud: on any story we run about ESPN — even straightforward, factual news reports about the business, or about parent company Disney — the majority of the reader comments are furious, often all-caps screeds about how ESPN “went liberal” or how it needs to “fire Jemele Hill” or how the commenter will never watch ESPN again because of its politics.)

In the era of Trump, when everything has become a partisan issue — when candy brands have to clarify that they respect women, and the maker of tiki torches has to clarify that it does not support white nationalism — ESPN has become a perfect political punching bag, a target for all the vitriol that bubbled to the fore in the 2016 election cycle.

So, how did ESPN get here?

Jemele Hill (L) and Michael Smith on Feb 1, 2017. (via ESPN)
Jemele Hill (L) and Michael Smith on Feb 1, 2017. (via ESPN)

Caitlyn Jenner, Barack Obama, Curt Schilling, Colin Kaepernick

Those who insist that at some point ESPN took a liberal turn typically point to one of these moments: ESPN gave Caitlyn Jenner its Arthur Ashe Courage Award in 2015; it fired baseball analyst Curt Schilling, a vocal conservative, in April 2016; and it held a special town hall on race relations with President Barack Obama in October 2016. Then, more broadly, critics say ESPN covered Colin Kaepernick’s anthem protests obsessively during the 2016 NFL season.

It didn’t help when ESPN anchor Linda Cohn, in April of this year, said in a radio interview that she believes ESPN’s politics are partially to blame for its subscriber declines. Politics, Cohn said, are “definitely a percentage of it … if anyone wants to ignore that fact, then they’re blind.”